Sindh Human Rights Commission takes notice of honour killings, child labour

Human rights violations were taken note of in a public hearing held at Darbar Hall of Dadu Deputy Commissioner's Office on Tuesday by Sindh Human Rights Commission (SHRC) chairperson retired Justice Majida Rizvi.


ANI | Dadu | Updated: 08-04-2021 10:59 IST | Created: 08-04-2021 10:53 IST
Sindh Human Rights Commission takes notice of honour killings, child labour
Sindh Human Rights Commission. Image Credit: ANI
  • Country:
  • Pakistan

Human rights violations were taken note of in a public hearing held at Darbar Hall of Dadu Deputy Commissioner's Office on Tuesday by Sindh Human Rights Commission (SHRC) chairperson retired Justice Majida Rizvi. After the hearing, Rizvi pledged that she would write to the authorities concerned to make them address issues of rights violation, reported Dawn.

During the hearing of the cases, it was pointed by the district officials that last year 15 women were killed for honor in the district; women complaint cells established in the district had registered 500 cases last year and in the first trimester this year around 70 cases were registered. Civil society representatives informed the SHRC that over 100,000 children were currently out of school and 450 schools were lying closed in the district.

They said no budgetary allocations were released to schools and, as a result, children had to sit on the floor of their classrooms, reported Dawn. Meanwhile, some civil society representatives informed the SHRC that over 100,000 children in their schooling age were made to work. They said the labor officer of the district always remained away from his office whereas no officer of the department was visiting the district to check child labor.

Some others complained that the work on a 430-bed hospital had not been resumed for eight years although payments had been made to contractors. Justice Rizvi later told the media that the SHRC had been holding such hearings in all districts of the province and after collecting facts it would submit a comprehensive report on human rights violations to the government.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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